Brigid Nease, the superintendent of the Washington West Supervisory Union, said Tuesday that flowers, food, and messages from every corner of the state have poured in following the deaths of Harwood juniors Mary Harris, Cyrus Zschau, Liam Hale, and Eli Brookens.

Their childhood friend, Janie Kozzi, went to Kimball Union Academy in Meriden, New Hampshire, and was with the tightknit Harwood group as they returned from a concert Saturday night.

“I think it’s comforting,” Nease said of the kindness the Harwood community has felt from other Vermont schools. “I’m certain that the faculty feels hugged by the state. We are just hearing from everyone.”

Police said Bourgoin crashed into the teens' car, then stole a police cruiser before crashing it into at least seven other vehicles. While those subsequent crashes caused several injuries, none of them were life-threatening, police said.

Tuesday, police served an arrest warrant on the hospitalized Bourgoin for his alleged theft of the cruiser. He is in custody of the Vermont Department of Corrections.

It was not immediately known if Bourgoin is being represented by an attorney.

In the wake of the loss of the students, social media became a prime way many people, including educators, showed they are “Harwood Strong.”

And Williston's district principal, Greg Marino, tweeted, “Thinking of you all. One step / day at a time.”

Vermont’s education secretary told necn it touches her heart to see so many districts rallying behind Harwood.

“I am so grateful to live in this state,” said Rebecca Holcombe, the secretary of the Vermont Agency of Education. “I don’t think anything can fix the hurt. But what we can do is try to show that we’re there and that we’re holding hands behind them to support these communities.”

Olivia Dickinson and her fellow South Burlington field hockey players made nearly 1,000 memorial ribbons for students to wear, the student athlete said.

“Things like this make you think a lot about how grateful you are to be in school today,” Dickinson said of the tragedy. “To have them in our thoughts all day and see everyone supporting them like this is awesome.”

“Vermont’s a very small state and we’re basically one big community,” observed Mehul Shah, the South Burlington High School student council president. “So anything that happens anywhere in the state, Vermont’s always there to support every community.”